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I know an .so file is a kind of dynamic library (lots of threads can share such libraries so there is no need to have more than one copy of it in memory). But what is the difference between .a and .la? Are these all static libraries?

If dynamic libs have big advantages over static ones, why there are still lots of static libraries? When should I try to build code into .so or .a?

[mirror@home ins_openvpn]$ ls lib/openvpn/plugins/ -l
total 96
-rw-r--r-- 1 mirror mirror 22892 Sep  2 23:25 openvpn-plugin-auth-pam.a
-rwxr-xr-x 1 mirror mirror   931 Sep  2 23:25 openvpn-plugin-auth-pam.la
-rwxr-xr-x 1 mirror mirror 23621 Sep  2 23:25 openvpn-plugin-auth-pam.so
-rw-r--r-- 1 mirror mirror 17228 Sep  2 23:25 openvpn-plugin-down-root.a
-rwxr-xr-x 1 mirror mirror   932 Sep  2 23:25 openvpn-plugin-down-root.la
-rwxr-xr-x 1 mirror mirror 18805 Sep  2 23:25 openvpn-plugin-down-root.so
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2 Answers 2

381

File type breakdown

.so files are dynamic libraries. The suffix stands for "shared object", because all the applications that are linked with the library use the same file, rather than making a copy in the resulting executable.

.a files are static libraries. The suffix stands for "archive", because they're actually just an archive (made with the ar command -- a predecessor of tar that's now just used for making libraries) of the original .o object files.

.la files are text files used by the GNU "libtools" package to describe the files that make up the corresponding library. You can find more information about them in this question: What are libtool's .la file for?

Static vs Dynamic

Static

  • Pro: The user always uses the version of the library that you've tested with your application, so there shouldn't be any surprising compatibility problems.

  • Con: If a problem is fixed in a library, you need to redistribute your application to take advantage of it. However, unless it's a library that users are likely to update on their own, you'd might need to do this anyway.

Dynamic

  • Pro: Your process's memory footprint is smaller, because the memory used for the library is amortized among all the processes using the library.

  • Pro: Libraries can be loaded on demand at run time; this is good for plugins, so you don't have to choose the plugins to be used when compiling and installing the software. New plugins can be added on the fly.

  • Con: The library might not exist on the system where someone is trying to install the application, or they might have a version that's not compatible with the application. To mitigate this, the application package might need to include a copy of the library, so it can install it if necessary. This is also often mitigated by package managers, which can download and install any necessary dependencies.

  • Con: Link-Time Optimization is generally not possible, so there could possibly be efficiency implications in high-performance applications. See the Wikipedia discussion of WPO and LTO.

Dynamic libraries are especially useful for system libraries, like libc. These libraries often need to include code that's dependent on the specific OS and version, because kernel interfaces have changed. If you link a program with a static system library, it will only run on the version of the OS that this library version was written for. But if you use a dynamic library, it will automatically pick up the library that's installed on the system you run on.

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  • @Barmar, How would you weigh static library against dynamic libraries and which will you select as winner (if there can only be one winner)?
    – Pacerier
    Jun 26, 2015 at 23:01
  • 18
    That's a meaningless question. The weight of the pros and cons depends on the circumstances, there's no universal answer. It seems like you have an agenda, and you're trying to bait me.
    – Barmar
    Jun 26, 2015 at 23:06
  • 14
    Another factor is licensing - LGPL requires dynamic linking in a commercial context, i.e. where you don't want to distribute your source.
    – Sam
    Jan 5, 2016 at 13:47
  • 1
    @Sam The LGPL license is not a factor in this discussion.
    – DavidS
    Jun 10, 2018 at 3:22
  • 5
    @DavidS I think LGPL was just meant to give an example of a library with restricted usage. Nothing wrong with using examples to demonstrate a point.
    – Keith M
    Mar 25, 2019 at 21:45
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On top of the given answer, also to say that static library is like a collection of object files. When there is a call to a function or anything else in static library, the linker searches for the referenced item in the library and add that object file that defines the referenced item to the executable. On the other hand, shared library is like a single big object file that is composed of all other object files. Therefore, if you call a symbol in shared lib, then all object file is referenced in the executable.

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